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GoFundMe says it removed George Santos’ fundraiser for a veteran’s sick dog and banned Santos’ email from the platform after he ghosted them

George SantosNew York Congressman-Elect George Santos speaks during the Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC) annual leadership meeting.

David Becker for the Washington Post/via Getty Images

  • GoFundMe says it took down a 2016 fundraiser for a dying dog that was linked to George Santos.
  • GoFundMe said its trust and safety team could not contact him, and later suspended his account.
  • GoFundMe told Insider it has a “zero tolerance policy” for the misuse of its services.

GoFundMe says it suspended Rep. George Santos’ account from its platform in late 2016 and removed a fundraiser he started for a dying dog.

GoFundMe was responding to queries from Insider about a new scandal plaguing Santos. As first reported by Patch, a military veteran is accusing Santos of taking $3,000 worth of GoFundMe funds meant for the man’s sick dog.

“When we received a report of an issue with this fundraiser in late 2016, our trust and safety team sought proof of the delivery of funds from the organizer,” GoFundMe told Insider. The platform was responding to Insider’s questions on the fundraiser, started by one Anthony Devolder. Devolder is one of Santos’ known aliases.

“The organizer failed to respond, which led to the fundraiser being removed and the email associated with that account prohibited from further use on our platform,” GoFundMe added in its statement. 

The platform told Insider that it has a “zero tolerance policy” for misuse of its services. It added that it cooperates with law enforcement officers who are investigating accusations of wrongdoing.

GoFundMe did not immediately respond to follow-up queries on when the fundraiser was removed.

Rich Osthoff, a veteran who lives in New Jersey, is accusing Santos of pilfering the GoFundMe funds. Osthoff told Patch that a man named Anthony Devolder started a GoFundMe page for his sick dog, Sapphire, in 2016.

Insider saw multiple posts on Osthoff’s Facebook page from May to July 2016 linked to a GoFundMe page titled, “Click here to support sapphire The Veteran rescue! by Anthony Devolder.”

GoFundMe confirmed to Insider that the fundraiser raised over $3,000. But Osthoff says Devolder changed tack after the fundraiser hit the $3,000 mark, saying the cash would go to other dogs before eventually ghosting Osthoff altogether.

Questions about the GoFundMe funds join the swirl of lies and controversies surrounding Santos, who has admitted to lying about his education, his heritage, and his work history. 

Santos he has denied knowing Osthoff, calling the Patch story “fake” in a text message to Semafor.

Osthoff and representatives for Santos did not immediately respond to Insider’s requests for comment.

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Elon Musk Depicted as Liar, Visionary as Tesla Tweet Trial Begins

SAN FRANCISCO — Elon Musk was depicted Wednesday as either a liar who callously jeopardized the savings of “regular people” or a well-intentioned visionary as attorneys delivered opening statements at a trial focused on a Tesla buyout that never happened.

Lawyers on opposing sides drew the starkly different portraits of Musk for a nine-person jury that will hear the three-week trial. The case is focused on two August 2018 tweets that the billionaire posted on Twitter, which he now owns.

The tweets indicated that Musk had lined up the financing to take Tesla private at a time when the automaker’s stock was slumping amid production problems.

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The prospect of a $72 billion buyout fueled a rally in the company’s stock price that abruptly ended a week later after it became apparent that he did not have the funding to pull off the deal after all. Tesla shareholders then sued him, saying that Tesla shares would not have swung so widely in value if he had not dangled the idea of buying the company for $420 per share.

Nicholas Porritt, a lawyer representing Glen Littleton and other Tesla shareholders in the class-action case, promptly vilified Musk as he addressed jurors.

“Why are we here?” Porritt asked. “We are here because Elon Musk, chairman and chief executive of Tesla, lied. His lies caused regular people like Glen Littleton to lose millions and millions of dollars.” He also asserted that Musk’s tweet also hurt pension funds and other organizations that owned Tesla stock at the time.

Musk’s lawyer, Alex Spiro, countered that the run-up in Tesla’s stock after the tweet mostly reflected investors’ belief in Musk’s ability to pull off stunning feats, including building the world’s largest electric automaker while also running SpaceX, a maker of rocket ships.

“Mr. Musk tries to do things that have never been done before. Everyone knows that,” Spiro told the jury.

Read More: Elon Musk Is Convinced He’s the Future. We Need to Look Beyond Him

Spiro added that Musk had been in advanced talks with representatives from Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund to take Tesla private.

“He didn’t plan to tweet this,” Spiro said of Musk’s Aug. 7, 2018, statement at the heart of the trial. “It was a split-second decision” aimed at being as transparent as possible about the discussions with the Saudi fund about a potential deal.

After saying “funding secured” for the buyout, Musk followed up with another tweet that suggested a deal was imminent.

Littleton, a 71-year-old investor from Kansas City, Missouri, was the first witness called to the stand. He said Musk’s claim about the financing alarmed him because he had purchased Tesla investments designed to reward him for his belief that the automaker’s stock would eventually be worth far more than the $420.

He said he sold most of his holdings to cut his losses but still saw the value of his Tesla portfolio plunge by 75%.

“The damage was done,” Littleton lamented. “I was in a state of shock.”

Littleton’s frustration escalated in October 2018, when he lashed out at Tesla for late deliveries on vehicles for some of his nieces and nephews. That led him to become a lead investor in the lawsuit.

“I still believe in Tesla to this day. I do,” Littleton said.

Read More: Elon Musk’s Twitter Plans Show He’s Lost Focus on What Got Him This Far

During cross-examination, a lawyer for Tesla’s board of directors repeatedly questioned whether Littleton had legitimate reason to believe a buyout was inevitable, but the investor remained steadfast even while seeming confused at times.

“’Funding secured’ was the only thing that mattered to me,” Littleton testified. “That was such a defining statement.”

Musk’s 2018 tweets attracted the attention of securities regulators, who concluded that they were improper and that he was lying. In a settlement, they forced him to pay $40 million and required him to step down as Tesla chairman.

U.S. District Judge Edward Chen, who is presiding over the trial, ruled that the shareholders’ lawyers can’t mention that settlement in the case.

But Chen has already ruled that Musk’s tweet was false, a finding that can be alluded to during the trial without specifically mentioning the determination made by the judge. Pollitt seized on that opportunity during his opening statement, informing jurors that they are to assume Musk’s tweet was false, as the judge allowed. Spiro shook his head as he listened.

The trial’s outcome may turn on the jury’s interpretation of Musk’s motive for the tweets. And Musk will have his chance to make his case to the jury.

After the trial adjourned Wednesday, Porritt told The Associated Press he hopes to call Musk to the stand when the proceedings resume Friday after two other witnesses testify. If the allotted time runs out Friday, Musk will likely testify Monday, Porritt said.

Musk’s leadership of Twitter — where he has gutted the staff and alienated users and advertisers — has proven unpopular among Tesla’s current stockholders, who are worried that he has been devoting less time to automaker at a time of intensifying competition.

Read More: The Clarifying Moment Elon Musk Has Given Us

Those concerns contributed to a 65% percent decline in Tesla’s stock last year that wiped out more than $700 billion in shareholder wealth — far more than the $14 billion swing that occurred between the company’s high and low stock prices from Aug. 7 to Aug. 17, 2018, the period covered in the lawsuit.

Tesla’s stock has split twice since then, making the $420 price cited in his 2018 tweet worth $28 on adjusted basis now. The shares closed Wednesday at $128.78, down from the company’s November 2021 split-adjusted peak of $414.50.

After Musk dropped the idea of a Tesla buyout, the company overcame a production problem, resulting in a rapid upturn in car sales that caused its stock to soar and made Musk the world’s richest person until he bought Twitter. Musk dropped from the top spot on the wealth list after a stock market backlash to his handling of Twitter.

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Microsoft to Lay Off 10,000 Workers, Joining Other Tech Giants in Scaling Back Pandemic-Era Expansions

Microsoft is cutting 10,000 workers, almost 5% of its workforce, joining other tech companies that have scaled back their pandemic-era expansions.

The company said in a regulatory filing Wednesday that the layoffs were a response to “macroeconomic conditions and changing customer priorities.”

The Redmond, Washington-based software giant said it will also be making changes to its hardware portfolio and consolidating its leased office locations.

Read More: Big Tech Layoffs Are Hurting Workers Far Beyond Silicon Valley

Microsoft is cutting far fewer jobs than it had added during the COVID-19 pandemic as it responded to a boom in demand for its workplace software and cloud computing services with so many people working and studying from home.

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“A big part of this is just overexuberance in hiring,” said Joshua White, a finance professor at Vanderbilt University.

Microsoft’s workforce expanded by about 36% in the two fiscal years following the emergence of the pandemic, growing from 163,000 workers at the end of June 2020, to 221,000 in June 2022.

The layoffs represent “less than 5 percent of our total employee base, with some notifications happening today,” CEO Satya Nadella said in an email to employees.

“While we are eliminating roles in some areas, we will continue to hire in key strategic areas,” Nadella said. He emphasized the importance of building a “new computer platform” using advances in artificial intelligence.

He said customers that were accelerating their spending on digital technology during the pandemic are now trying to “optimize their digital spend to do more with less.”

“We’re also seeing organizations in every industry and geography exercise caution as some parts of the world are in a recession and other parts are anticipating one,” Nadella wrote.

Other tech companies have also been trimming jobs amid concerns about an economic slowdown.

Amazon and business software maker Salesforce earlier this month announced major job cuts as they prune payrolls that rapidly expanded during the pandemic lockdown.

Amazon said that it will be cutting about 18,000 positions and began notifying affected employees Wednesday in the U.S., Canada and Costa Rica, with other regions to follow, according to emails from executives. The job cuts, which began in November, are the largest set of layoffs in the Seattle company’s history, although just a fraction of its 1.5 million global workforce.

Read More: Big Tech’s Implosion Could Save the Planet

Also Wednesday, the U.K.-based cybersecurity firm Sophos confirmed it had laid off 10% of its global workforce — 450 employees — on Tuesday. Sophos, known for threat intelligence and detection, was acquired in 2020 by the private equity firm Thoma Bravo for $3.9 billion.

Facebook parent Meta is laying off 11,000 people, about 13% of its workforce. And Elon Musk, the new Twitter CEO, has slashed the company’s workforce.

Nadella made no direct mention of the layoffs on Wednesday when he put in an appearance at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting happening this week in Davos, Switzerland.

When asked by the forum’s founder Klaus Schwab on what tech layoffs meant for the industry’s business model, Nadella said companies that boomed during the COVID-19 pandemic are now seeing “normalization” of that demand.

“Quite frankly, we in the tech industry will also have to get efficient, right?” Nadella said. “It’s not about everyone else doing more with less. We will have to do more with less. So we will have to show our own productivity gains with our own sort of technology.”

Microsoft declined to answer questions about where the layoffs and office closures would be concentrated. The company sent notice to Washington state employment officials Wednesday that it was cutting 878 workers at its offices in Redmond and the nearby cities of Bellevue and Issaquah.

As of June, it had 122,000 workers in the U.S. and 99,000 elsewhere.

White, the Vanderbilt professor, said all industries are looking to cut costs ahead of a possible recession but tech companies could be particularly sensitive to the rapid rise in interest rates, a tool that has been used aggressively in recent months by the Federal Reserve in its fight against inflation.

“This hits tech companies a little harder than it does industrials or consumer staples because a huge portion of Microsoft’s value is on projects with cash flows that won’t pay off for several years,” he said.

Among the projects that have been attracting attention recently is Microsoft’s investment in its San Francisco startup partner OpenAI, maker of the writing tool ChatGPT and other AI systems that can generate readable text, images and computer code.

Read More: AI Chatbots Are Getting Better. But an Interview With ChatGPT Reveals Their Limits

Microsoft, which owns the Xbox game business, also faces regulatory uncertainty in the U.S. and Europe delaying its planned $68.7 billion takeover of video game company Activision Blizzard, which had about 9,800 employees as of a year ago.

AP Business Writers Kelvin Chan in London and Frank Bajak in Boston contributed to this story.

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Georgia state trooper shot, another man killed in Atlanta

ATLANTA (AP) — Authorities say a Georgia state trooper was shot and injured and another man was killed in an exchange of gunfire Wednesday morning in Atlanta.

A person shot at law enforcement officers during a “multi-agency operation” on Constitution Road and law enforcement returned fire, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said on Twitter. The trooper was hit and was taken to a hospital where he was in surgery, the agency said.

The GBI said the investigation is active and ongoing.

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EY says it hasn’t seen ‘a rash of talent that’s all of a sudden available’ despite huge tech layoffs

Carmine Di Sibio, CEO of EYCarmine Di Sibio, CEO of EY, said it’s “business as usual” for the company’s hiring.

Michael Kovac/Getty Images

  • Accounting firm EY is looking to hire around 220,000 people in the year ending July 2023, a top executive said in November.
  • But it’s not like there’s a huge influx of talent now because of the widespread tech layoffs. 
  • The CEO of EY told Bloomberg on Wednesday it isn’t seeing “a rash of talent” that’s suddenly available.

Tech companies may be laying off staff left, right and center — but it doesn’t mean there’s an abundance of talent readily available in the market, the CEO of accounting giant EY told Bloomberg on Wednesday.

“If you just read the headlines around what’s going on, you might think, there’s all kinds of people who know technology out there,” Carmine Di Sibio told Bloomberg in an interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

But that doesn’t appear to be the case.

“We’re not struggling to source talent, but it’s not like we’re seeing a rash of talent that’s all of a sudden available,” Di Sibio said, adding that the firm’s hiring is “business as usual.”

EY, which is headquartered in the UK, is looking to hire around 220,000 people globally in the 12 months to July 2023, Trent Henry, EY’s global vice chair for talent had told Bloomberg back in November.

The company — which plans to split its accounting and consulting businesses into two separate companies — employs over 300,000 people globally. The consulting arm is expected to employ as many as 230,000 people, Di Sibio told Bloomberg on Wednesday.

EY’s hiring spree stands in contrast to the large-scale tech layoffs

The accounting firm seems to be one of few employers still hiring on a large scale.

On Wednesday, Microsoft announced it would slash 10,000 jobs, as customers have become more careful about their digital spend. Other major tech companies that have cut staff recently include Amazon, Meta, and Salesforce. 

In just about 18 days into the new year, there have already been 37,526 layoffs at 122 tech companies so far, according to Layoffs.fyi, which is tracking and aggregating the data. That’s already about a quarter of the 154,386 tech workers laid off in the whole of 2022, per the same tracker.

The rash of layoffs — which started last year — came after tech companies hired and expanded aggressively during the pandemic. But they started conducting widespread layoffs in late 2022, as earnings weakened across the board amid fears of an impending recession. This also spilled over into 2023. 

EY did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment sent outside regular business hours.

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Trump thought an old picture of E. Jean Carroll was his ex-wife Marla Maples, despite saying the columnist suing him for sexual assault and defamation was ‘not his type’

An old photo used in a Trump deposition, with a newer photo of Marla Maples superimposed on itThe old photo used in the deposition where Trump mistook E. Jean Carroll for his ex-wife, Marla Maples.

Courtesy of Kaplan Hecker & Fink; Davidoff Studios/Getty Images

  • Trump mistook a woman who is suing him for sexual assault for his ex-wife during a deposition.
  • He has repeatedly said he couldn’t have raped E. Jean Carroll because she isn’t his “type.”
  • When confronted with the photo during the deposition, Trump said, “That’s Marla, yeah.”

Donald Trump appeared to think a photo of E. Jean Carroll — the columnist who has accused the former president of rape and is suing him for defamation — was a picture of his ex-wife Marla Maples.

Trump mixed up the two women when shown a photograph from 1987 during a deposition last year, a new transcript shows.

Trump’s case of mistaken identity occurred even though he has repeatedly suggested that he couldn’t have assaulted Carroll because she is not his “type.” Trump and Maples were married from 1993 to 1999.

“That’s Marla, yeah. That’s my wife,” Trump said when shown a photo of Carroll by her lawyer Roberta Kaplan during an October 2022 deposition at Mar-a-Lago, according to newly-unsealed excerpts of the conversation obtained by Insider. 

Insider contacted Carroll’s lawyers, and her team sent over the photo used in the deposition. 

When Trump made the mix-up, his lawyer, Alina Habba, appeared to correct him and point out that the woman was Carroll. “Oh, I see,” Trump said in response to Habba’s correction.

Trump in his deposition repeatedly doubled down on his stance that he would never have found Carroll attractive.

“When I say she’s not my type, I say she is not a woman I would ever be attracted to,” Trump said in the deposition. “I just — it’s not even meant to be an insult. Now, some people would be attracted to her perhaps.· I would never be attracted to her.”

Carroll is currently suing Trump for defamation and, in a separate case, sexual assault, stemming from an alleged incident in a dressing room of Bergdorf Goodman in the mid-1990s, in which she accused the former president of raping her. 

Attorneys for Trump did not immediately respond to Insider’s requests for comment. 

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Microsoft cuts 10,000 jobs, about 5% of global workforce

Microsoft is cutting 10,000 workers, almost 5% of its workforce, in response to “macroeconomic conditions and changing customer priorities.”

The company said in a regulatory filing Wednesday that had just notified employees of the layoffs, some of which begin immediately.

The company said it will also be making changes to its hardware portfolio and consolidating its leased office locations.

The layoffs represent “less than 5 percent of our total employee base, with some notifications happening today,” Nadella said.

“While we are eliminating roles in some areas, we will continue to hire in key strategic areas,” Nadella said. He emphasized the importance of building a “new computer platform” using advances in artificial intelligence.